Sam Bankman-Fried, the previous CEO of the now-defunct FTX alternate, has denied shifting funds tied to Alameda wallets, days after he was launched on a $250 million bond.

On Dec. 30, Fried tweeted to his 1.1 million followers, denying any involvement within the motion of funds from Alameda wallets.  In response to the allegations that he could have been answerable for shifting funds out of Alameda wallets, he shared: “None of those are me. I am not and could not be shifting any of these funds; I haven’t got entry to them anymore.”

SBF’s tweet was in response to a information story revealed by Cointelegraph, which reported {that a} pockets tackle that began with 0x64e9 had acquired over 600 ETH from wallets that belonged to Alameda. In response to on-chain transactional data, a part of the funds have been swapped to USDT whereas the opposite a part of the transaction was despatched to a mixing service.

The motion of funds and the way wherein it was moved raised suspicions inside the crypto group that it could have been an inside job. Some suspected that SBF could have been behind it. The Alameda pockets was discovered to be swapping bits of ERC-20s for Ether and USDT, which have been then funneled via immediate exchanges and mixers.

Associated: FTX founder reportedly cashes out $684K after being launched on bail

In response to an on-chain investigation carried out by DeFi educator BowTiedIguana, SBF has reportedly cashed out $684,000 in crypto through. an alternate in Seychelles, whereas being below home arrest. 

On Dec. 29, BowTiedIguana reported on a sequence of pockets transactions that have been allegedly linked to SBF. The transaction data appeared to counsel that the previous FTX CEO could have violated launch situations to not spend greater than $1,000 with out permission from the courtroom.